Coding standards

Guidelines Summary

This style guide is intended to help the computer professional produce better Java programs. It presents a set of specific guidelines for using the features of Java in a disciplined manner. The goal is to develop high quality, reliable, reusable, portable software. For a number of reasons, no programming language can ensure the achievements of these desirable objectives on its own. Programming must be embedded in a disciplined development process that addresses a number of topics in a well managed way. The use of Java is one of those. It must conform to good programming practices be based on well established software engineering principles. This style guide is intended to bridge the gap between these principles and the actual practice of programming in Java.

Clear, readable, understandable source text eases program evolution, adaptation and maintenance. First, such source text is more likely to be correct and reliable. Second, effective code adaptation is a prerequisite to code reuse, a technique that has the potential for drastic reductions in system development costs. Easy adaptation requires thorough understanding of the software, and that is facilitated considerably by clarity. Finally, since maintenance (really evolution) is a costly process that continues throughout the life of a system, clarity plays a major role in keeping maintenance costs down. Over the entire life cycle, code has to be read and understood far more often than it is written; the investment of effort in writing readable, understandable code is thus well worthwhile. Many of the guidelines in this style guide are designed to promote clarity of the source text.

This style guide is intended for those involved in the development of real software systems written in Java. Different roles in a software project can exploit the style guide in different ways. The programmer can use it as a reference on good Java style. It can be used in code reviews as a common reference. Finally, lessons learned in real projects can be captured by extending the style guide.

Class layout and comments

Files and filenames

Files longer than 2000 lines are cumbersome and should be avoided.

File names

The file must be named after the class it represents. As for most cases each file contains only one class, this is an easy naming convention. For nested or inner classes the name of the main class must be the name of the file. As names in Java are case-sensitive, the filename is case-sensitive also.

File organization

Each Java source file contains a single class or interface. Of course, this excludes inner classes as these must be defined without an (outer) class, and thus in the same file.

Java source files have the following ordering:

Beginning comments

Package and import statements

Class and interface declarations

Beginning comments

All source files must begin with the comments shown in the following code sample.

/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
* distributed with this work for additional information
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
* to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
* with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
* software distributed under the License is distributed on an
* "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
* KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
* specific language governing permissions and limitations
* under the License.
*/

Note that this comment part is not according to the JavaDoc style (See: How to write doc comments for JavaDoc - Sun Microsystems, Inc.) as this is file specific information that is not relevant in generated API documentation.

Package and import Statements

The first non-comment line of most Java source files is a package statement. After an empty line import statements can follow. For example:

Package rules.
When not using an explicit package statement in your code the code still is in a package, the default package. This easily results in name clashes and as package naming should be a part of the design, always use an explicit package name. For naming rules of packages see 3.4 Naming conventions.

Import statements need to be explicit in order to overcome name clashes.
They should be grouped by name. When the number of import statements of the same package exceeds the 'readability' limit (please use common sense), then import the complete package by adding '.*'.

Import order.
First in this section should be the standard Java imports like: java.lang.Throwable. Second should be the Java extensions (i.e. javax), third, the third party stuff. Finally the project-specific imports should be added.

Class and interface Declarations

The following comment block is an example for the comment that belongs to the declaration of a class or an interface. The combination of JavaDoc syntax and keywords that are expanded by the source integrity tool result in the following block:

/**
* This class is not really a class, because this file is just
* a template that shows how the file header and class header
* should look like.
*
* @author <a href="mailto:dev@felix.apache.org">Felix Project Team</a>
*/

The following table describes the parts of a class or interface declaration, in the order that they should appear.

These methods should also be grouped by functionality rather than by scope or accessibility. E.g. a private class method can be in between two public instance methods. The goal is to make reading and understanding the code easier. When implementing an interface, group the methods that are part of the interface.

Methods of interfaces that are implemented by the class.

Automatically grouped by functionality if grouped by interface.

Inner classes

As they are only visible within their top-level class, they are placed at the bottom of the file.

Indentation

Four spaces should be used as unit of indentation. Use spaces or let your editor convert tabs to spaces as some editors might show the tabs different than they were intended! Tabs must be set exactly every 4 spaces.

Line length

There is no explicit limit for the length of a line. Make sure that the flow of the code is clear and that, when printing the file, it is well formed when using a reasonable font. A reasonable length would be around 80 characters.

Wrapping lines

When an expression will not fit on a single line, break it according to these general principles:

break after a comma;

break before an operator;

prefer higher level breaks to lower level breaks;

align the new line with the beginning of the expression after the assignment;

if the above rules lead to confusing code or to code that's squished up against the right margin, please use common sense.

Some examples breaking an arithmetic expression. The first is preferred, since the break occurs outside the parenthesised expression:

Comment

Comment styles

The compiler ignores everything from // to the end of the line. Use this style when adding a description or some kind of explanation at the same line of code.

/* text */

The compiler ignores everything from /* to */. The next documentation style is preferred.

/** Documentation. */

This indicates a documentation comment (doc comment, for short). The compiler ignores this kind of comment, just like it ignores comments that use /* and */. The JDK JavaDoc tool uses doc comments when preparing automatically generated documentation (See: JavaDoc keywords and HTML tags). But JavaDoc only uses this documentation when it occurs at an expected position in the file like the class definition or a member declaration.

Block comments

Block comments are used to provide English descriptions of the contents of files, the task of methods and the description of data structures and algorithms. Block comments should be used at the beginning of each file and before each method. They can also be used in other places, such as within methods.

For a description of class comment see 2.1.3.3 Class and Interface Declarations. A method block comment looks as follows:

/**
* Position the splitter location at a specified position.
* This method can for instance be used when the last position
* is stored as a preference setting for the user.
*
* @param position New position of divider, defined in pixels
* from the left of the containing window
* @see com.sun.java.swing.JSplitPane
* @exception org.apache.felix.player.PositionException
* Whenever an invalid position is passed.
*/
public void setSplitterLocation(int position) throws PositionException

JavaDoc keywords and HTML tags

For class headers, method headers and member variables JavaDoc is used in order to generate API documentation from the source later on (See: JavaDoc homepage - Sun Microsystems, Inc.).
A few specific JavaDoc keywords are:

Keyword

Short description

@version

Can be used to label a specific version of a package or application so the documentation shows this version number also.

@author

The name entered here is shown as the author.

@param

Used to define one parameter and describe this parameter.

@see

When there are similarities with another class this tag is used to offer the reader a hyperlink to the mentioned class.

@exception or @throws

Offered as hyperlink to the exception that can be thrown by a method.

@return

Return value of a method

Some HTML-tags that can be used in order to make the comment blocks more readable:

Tag

Short description

<p>

New paragraph.

<br>

Break, a carriage return. For separation of two paragraphs, usage of <p> is preferred.

<ul><li></li></ul>

Unordered list of items; each item should start with a <li> tag. By most browsers, this is formatted as a bulleted list.

Preformatted text. Use these tags to protect figures and schemas "drawn" in Ascii, against formatting by the browser (which normally ignores whitespace and line breaks)

<dl><dt></dt><dd></dd></dl>

Definition lists; <dt> specifies the term that is defined and <dd> the definition of this term. Not frequently used.

Note: there is no need to embed the parameter name in the @param tag in <code> tags; this is done by javadoc automatically. The same holds for the exception name in the @exception or @throws tag. In the clarifying text however, use the <code> tags when refering to parameter names etc. The example below shows the <code> tag being used for the array parameter in the text, but not in its definition.

Example:

/**
* Prints a range from an object array. The range
* is specified by the first element to print, and
* ranges to the last element of the array.
*
* @param array contains the objects to print
* @param first index of first element in
* the <code>array</code> to print
*/
public void printRange(Object[] array, int first)

Java syntax and its layout

Declarations

When declaring a variable or method make the accessibility as restrictive as possible. When using multiple keywords use the following ordering of keywords:

accessibility
Start with the accessibility as it makes clear if the method or variable is reachable at all.

static (if applicable)

final (if applicable)

return type (methods only) or type (for variables)
The type is for readability as close as possible to the name.

This order is also compatible with the order that is used in Java for the main() method. This results in following sequence:

Number per line

One declaration per line is recommended since it encourages commenting and it does not lead to confusing code. It also is more clear about the explicit initialization of variables as discussed in Initialization.

Placement

In a method, declare local variables just before they are needed. This overcomes the problem of a big list of parameters at the beginning of a method and the use of a variable becomes more clearly in the context of the code, .e.g. its initialization.

Initialization

The initialization of class variables is strictly not necessary because of the default initialization that takes place for these kinds of members. For some types, e.g. Booleans, this requires detailed knowledge of all the default values so it is more clear and explicit to initialize each member.
Variables that are used and declared within methods must always be initialized explicitly (the compiler will generate an error when you forget this).

Class and Interface Declarations

When coding Java classes and interfaces, the following formatting rules should be followed:

no space between a method and its parameter list

"{" is on a line by itself indented to match its corresponding opening statetment, except when it is a null statement, in which case the "{" should appear on the same line as the opening statement

"}" starts a line by itself indented to match its corresponding opening statement, except when it is a null statement, in which the case the "}" should appear immediately after the "{".

Statements

Simple statements

Compound statements

Compound statements are statements that contain lists of statements enclosed in braces ("{...}"):

The enclosed statements should be indented one more level than the compound statement.

The opening brace should be at the end of the line that begins the compound statement; the closing brace should begin a line and be indented to the beginning of the compound statement.

Braces are used around all statements, even single statements, when they are part of a control structure, such as a if-else or for statement. This makes it easier to add statements without accidentally introducing bugs due to forgetting to add braces.

if, if-else, if else-if else statements

There are a lot of nested possibilities for if-else constructions. All these variations can be programmed in very cryptic ways that easily and often will lead to buggy code. By being more explicit in the used coding style a lot of confusion can be taken away.

Note: When using only one statement in a compound block brackets are optional. It can be a good practice to use always brackets because mistakes can be made easily when adding a second statement and brackets are forgotten.

The following example illustrates the correct use of brackets in a few different if-then-else constructions:

Note that the catch and the finally start at a new line in order to be compliant to the guidelines for if-then-else statements.

White Space

Blank lines

Blank lines improve readability by setting of sections of code that are logically related.

Two blank lines should always be used in the following circumstances:

between class and interface definitions;

between a group of methods that belong together (by its functionality or because they are part of the same interface).

One blank line should always be used in the following circumstances:

between methods;

before a block or single line comment;

between logical sections inside a method to improve readability.

Blank spaces

Blank spaces should be used in the following circumstances:

A keyword followed by a parenthesis should be separated by a space.

while (ready == false)
{
...
}

Note that blanks should not be used between a method call and its opening parenthesis. This helps to distinguish keywords from function calls.

Blanks should appear after commas in argument lists.

All binary operators except "." should be separated from their operands by spaces. Blanks should never separate unary operators such as unary minus, increment("++") and decrement("--") from their operands.

a += c + d;
a = (a + b) / (c * d);
xCoord++;

The expressions in a for statement should be separated by blanks.

for (expr1; cond1; expr2)

Casts should be followed by a blank.

myInstance.doIt((TreeFrame) frame);

Naming conventions

Naming conventions make programs more understandable by making them easier to read. They can also give information about the function of the identifier.

Identifier Type

Rules for Naming

Examples

Classes or inner classes

Class names should be nouns, in mixed case with the first letter of each word capitalised. Try to keep your class names simple and descriptive. Use whole words and avoid acronyms and abbreviations.

class Raster;class TreeFrame;

Interfaces

Interface names should be capitalized like class names.

interface Enumeration;

Methods

Methods should be verbs in mixed case with the first letter lowercase. Within each method name capital letters separate words. Property methods or get-set methods are used as follows:
When a method is used to get a value start the method name with 'get'. When a method is used to set a value start the method name with 'set'.

run(); runFast(); setBackground();

Variables (except for (constant) static final variables and member variables)

All variables are in mixed case with a lowercase first letter. Words are separated by capital letters.

int index;float myWidth;

Member variables

The same capitalisation as for normal variables prefixed with 'm_'.

int m_index;float m_myWidth;

Constant (static final) variables

Names should be all uppercase with words separated by underscores ("_").

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